The fiddler crab Minuca pugnax occupies thermally unstable mudflat habitats along the eastern United States coastline, where it uses behavioral thermoregulation, including burrow retreats, to manage body temperature (T). We explored the relationship between frequency of burrow use and environmental conditions, including burrow and surface temperatures, relative tidal height, and time of day, by twenty male M. pugnax in breeding areas around Flax Pond, New York, USA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehavioral thermoregulation is an important defense against the negative impacts of climate change for ectotherms. In this study we examined the use of burrows by a common intertidal crab, Minuca pugnax, to control body temperature. To understand how body temperatures respond to changes in the surface temperature and explore how efficiently crabs exploit the cooling potential of burrows to thermoregulate, we measured body, surface, and burrow temperatures during low tide on Sapelo Island, GA in March, May, August, and September of 2019.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImidacloprid is the most widely used of the nicotinoid insecticides, the fastest growing class of pesticides on the global market. Although less toxic to mammals and birds compared to organophosphates, nicotinoids have the potential to impact non-target invertebrates, especially through sublehal effects on behavior, physiology, reproduction, and development. We investigated the impact of sublethal doses of imidacloprid on the defensive responses of rusty crayfish Orconectes rusticus exposed to 0, 1, 10, and 100 µg•L of imidacloprid for 10 days (n = 7 crayfish per treatment).
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